Aiming Ren
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Aiming Ren.
Nature | 2012
Aiming Ren; Kanagalaghatta R. Rajashankar; Dinshaw J. Patel
Significant advances in our understanding of RNA architecture, folding and recognition have emerged from structure–function studies on riboswitches, non-coding RNAs whose sensing domains bind small ligands and whose adjacent expression platforms contain RNA elements involved in the control of gene regulation. We now report on the ligand-bound structure of the Thermotoga petrophila fluoride riboswitch, which adopts a higher-order RNA architecture stabilized by pseudoknot and long-range reversed Watson–Crick and Hoogsteen A•U pair formation. The bound fluoride ion is encapsulated within the junctional architecture, anchored in place through direct coordination to three Mg2+ ions, which in turn are octahedrally coordinated to water molecules and five inwardly pointing backbone phosphates. Our structure of the fluoride riboswitch in the bound state shows how RNA can form a binding pocket selective for fluoride, while discriminating against larger halide ions. The T. petrophila fluoride riboswitch probably functions in gene regulation through a transcription termination mechanism.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2014
Aiming Ren; Dinshaw J. Patel
The ydaO riboswitch, involved in sporulation, osmotic stress responses and cell wall metabolism, targets the second messenger c-di-AMP with subnanomolar affinity. We have solved the structure of c-di-AMP bound to the Thermoanaerobacter tengcongenesis ydaO riboswitch, thereby identifying a five-helical scaffold containing a zippered-up bubble, a pseudoknot and long-range tertiary base pairs. Highlights include the identification of two c-di-AMP binding pockets on the same face of the riboswitch, related by pseudo two-fold symmetry, with potential for cross-talk between sites mediated by adjacently-aligned base stacking alignments connecting pockets. The adenine rings of bound c-di-AMP molecules are wedged between bases and stabilized by stacking, base-sugar and sugar-sugar intermolecular hydrogen bonding interactions. The structural studies are complemented by ITC-based binding studies of mutants mediating key tertiary intermolecular contacts. The T. tengcongenesis ydaO riboswitch, like its B. subtilis counterpart, likely functions through a transcription termination mechanism, with the c-di-AMP bound state representing an ‘off’ switch.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2016
Aiming Ren; Nikola Vušurović; Jennifer Gebetsberger; Pu Gao; Michael Juen; Christoph Kreutz; Ronald Micura; Dinshaw J. Patel
The field of small self-cleaving nucleolytic ribozymes has been invigorated by the recent discovery of the twister, twister-sister, pistol and hatchet ribozymes. We report on the crystal structure of the env25 pistol ribozyme, which adopts a compact tertiary architecture stabilized by an embedded pseudoknot fold. The G-U cleavage site adopts a splayed-apart conformation with in-line alignment of the modeled 2′-O of G for attack on the adjacent to-be-cleaved P-O5′ bond. Highly conserved residues G40 (N1 position) and A32 (N3 and 2′-OH positions) are aligned to act as general base and general acid respectively to accelerate cleavage chemistry, with their roles confirmed from cleavage assays on mutants, and an increased pKa of 4.7 for A32. Our structure of the pistol ribozyme defines how the overall and local topologies dictate the in-line alignment at the G-U cleavage site, with cleavage assays on mutants identifying key residues participating in acid-base catalyzed cleavage chemistry.
Nature Communications | 2017
Luqian Zheng; Elisabeth Mairhofer; Marianna Teplova; Ye Zhang; Jinbiao Ma; Dinshaw J. Patel; Ronald Micura; Aiming Ren
Here we report on the crystal structure and cleavage assays of a four-way junctional twister-sister self-cleaving ribozyme. Notably, 11 conserved spatially separated loop nucleotides are brought into close proximity at the ribozyme core through long-range interactions mediated by hydrated Mg2+ cations. The C62–A63 step at the cleavage site adopts a splayed-apart orientation, with flexible C62 directed outwards, whereas A63 is directed inwards and anchored by stacking and hydrogen-bonding interactions. Structure-guided studies of key base, sugar, and phosphate mutations in the twister-sister ribozyme, suggest contributions to the cleavage chemistry from interactions between a guanine at the active site and the non-bridging oxygen of the scissile phosphate, a feature found previously also for the related twister ribozyme. Our four-way junctional pre-catalytic structure differs significantly in the alignment at the cleavage step (splayed-apart vs. base-stacked) and surrounding residues and hydrated Mg2+ ions relative to a reported three-way junctional pre-catalytic structure of the twister-sister ribozyme.Twister-sister is a self-cleaving ribozyme. Here, the authors report the 2.0 Å crystal structure of the four-way junctional twister-sister ribozyme in the pre-catalytic state and discuss mechanistic implications based on their mutagenesis experiments and comparisons with other ribozyme structures.
Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 2017
Aiming Ren; Ronald Micura; Dinshaw J. Patel
Small self-cleaving ribozymes are widely distributed in nature and are essential for rolling-circle-based replication of satellite and pathogenic RNAs. Earlier structure-function studies on the hammerhead, hairpin, glmS, hepatitis delta virus and Varkud satellite ribozymes have provided insights into their overall architecture, their catalytic active site organization, and the role of nearby nucleobases and hydrated divalent cations in facilitating general acid-base and electrostatic-mediated catalysis. This review focuses on recent structure-function research on active site alignments and catalytic mechanisms of the Rzb hammerhead ribozyme, as well as newly-identified pistol, twister and twister-sister ribozymes. In contrast to an agreed upon mechanistic understanding of self-cleavage by Rzb hammerhead and pistol ribozymes, there exists a divergence of views as to the cleavage site alignments and catalytic mechanisms adopted by twister and twister-sister ribozymes. One approach to resolving this conundrum would be to extend the structural studies from currently available pre-catalytic conformations to their transition state mimic vanadate counterparts for both ribozymes.
Nature Communications | 2014
Aiming Ren; Marija Košutić; Kanagalaghatta R. Rajashankar; Marina Frener; Tobias Santner; Eric Westhof; Ronald Micura; Dinshaw J. Patel
Cell Reports | 2015
Aiming Ren; Xin C. Wang; Kanagalaghatta R. Rajashankar; Roger A. Jones; Ming C. Hammond; Dinshaw J. Patel
RNA | 2017
Zhichao Miao; Ryszard W. Adamiak; Maciej Antczak; Robert T. Batey; Alexander J. Becka; Marcin Biesiada; Michal Boniecki; Janusz M. Bujnicki; Shi-Jie Chen; Clarence Yu Cheng; Fang-Chieh Chou; Adrian R. Ferré-D'Amaré; Rhiju Das; Wayne K. Dawson; Feng Ding; Nikolay V. Dokholyan; Stanislaw Dunin-Horkawicz; Caleb Geniesse; Kalli Kappel; Wipapat Kladwang; Andrey Krokhotin; Grzegorz Łach; François Major; Thomas H. Mann; Marcin Magnus; Katarzyna Pachulska-Wieczorek; Dinshaw J. Patel; Joseph A. Piccirilli; Mariusz Popenda; Katarzyna J. Purzycka
Genes & Development | 2013
Qi Dai; Aiming Ren; Jakub Orzechowski Westholm; Artem A. Serganov; Dinshaw J. Patel; Eric C. Lai
Angewandte Chemie | 2015
Marija Košutić; Sandro Neuner; Aiming Ren; Sara Flür; Christoph H. Wunderlich; Elisabeth Mairhofer; Nikola Vušurović; Jan Seikowski; Kathrin Breuker; Claudia Höbartner; Dinshaw J. Patel; Christoph Kreutz; Ronald Micura